KIEV (Sputnik) — Prosecutors will seek life imprisonment for Ukraine's ex-President Viktor Yanukovych in a treason case, prosecutor Viktor Kravchenko said at a briefing Thursday.
"The highest penalty is life imprisonment. The prosecution, because the accused and suspect Yanukovych did not plead guilty during the pre-trial investigation, will only petition for the highest punishment," Kravchenko said.
Obolonskyi District Court in Kiev announced a recess earlier in the day until May 18 to allow Yanukovych to take part in preliminary hearings via video linkup.
The treason case against the former president, who had been overthrown in 2014 by a West-fueled coup, was launched in November 2016. On April 11, Ukraine's President Petro Poroshenko signed the law allowing the conviction of Yanukovych in absentia.
Yanukovych's attorneys reportedly claimed that the law violated the European Convention on Human Rights.
Yanukovych, who now resides in Russia, served as Ukraine's president from 2010 until his ouster in February 2014 by the Ukrainian parliament, when he fled Ukraine in fear for his life. The coup was preceded by months of pro-European protests in Kiev sparked by Yanukovych's decision to postpone the signing of the Ukraine–European Union Association Agreement over unfavorable terms.